Visitors GASPED on the National Mall. A towering golden Trump and Epstein, locked in Titanic’s most romantic pose, stared back at them from the heart of American democracy. Some laughed. Some cried. Others raged. No one walked past without stopping. Because this wasn’t just a statue. It was an accusat… Continues…
Overnight, the “KING OF THE WORLD” statue turned the National Mall into a battleground of meaning. For some, it was a vile stunt; for others, a necessary mirror held up to power, wealth, and the company it keeps. The Titanic pose, once a symbol of innocence and young love, became a jarring reminder of accusations, secrets, and the people who seem to float above consequence.
Secret Handshake, the anonymous group behind the work, insists it is about memory and accountability in a year when Trump’s face looms from federal buildings and campaign rallies alike. By casting Trump and the late Jeffrey Epstein in shimmering gold, they force a question that can’t be unseen: who do we choose to immortalize, and what are we willing to forget to keep our heroes untouched?





